Sentences with phrase «detail over the film»

The restoration seems sufficient and I don't doubt that the format provides noticeable gains in detail over the film's 2000 DVD transfer.

Not exact matches

To read the full profile for more details about Nolan's film process, head on over to The New York Times.
Now that the filming is over, I can fill you in on the details!
Using the European XFEL's brilliant X-ray radiation, physicists, chemists, biologists, and other scientists from all over the world will be able to map the atomic details of viruses, decipher the molecular composition of cells, take three - dimensional images of the nanoworld, film chemical reactions, study processes such as those occurring deep inside planets, and more.
I shared our five - minute wedding video back in November and just when I thought I couldn't love MacKenzie and Philip any more, the twenty - minute feature film version arrived in my inbox and we got to relive every little detail all over again, just in time for our six month anniversary!
I like a crisp image if the film warrants it, but crispness, or seeing detail in a versimiltude way is not going to win me over.
This wry, wonderfully detailed film catches the enormous imbalance of a morose teen with no life experience other than the thousands of fictional and pop - culture references that fill his head and his room: A sketch of Woody Allen's head hangs over Oliver's bed.
The film retraces the steps of the bad boys and in a whodunit mystery style fills us in on all the lurid details, that also involves a clash with a wise - cracking vengeful gay Asian mobster head (Ken Jeong), an arrest by the police over the stolen police car, the smashing of the Mercedes convertible that Doug's father - in - law (Jeffrey Tambor) let his son - in - law drive and graphic photos in the end credits that further clear up the evening in question.
PYONGYANGST - My Review of THE LOVERS AND THE DESPOT (3 Stars) Evoking more questions than answers, THE LOVERS AND THE DESPOT, a documentary by filmmakers Ross Adam and Robert Cannan details the stranger than fiction account of a prominent South Korean film director and his actress ex-wife who were kidnapped by North Korea during Kim Jong Il's reign and were forced to make over 17 movies for him.
District 9 is partly presented as a faux documentary (rather than a mockumentary, which is what Roger Ebert wrongly labels the film... there is nothing funny about this movie), detailing how 20 years earlier, a huge alien spaceship (think Independence Day) parked itself over Johannesburg and... sat there.
Taking place entirely over the first four months of 1865 (and predominantly just January), the film details President Lincoln's uphill quest to get slavery outlawed quickly and definitively.
We also share details on over a dozen additional films, and round up this week's newest trailers and clips.
Based on the true story, it is always hard to criticize the events, but when your film solely relies on the dramatic heft over some of the very important details, it will suffer greatly.
It's not merely that Stoller's film is long (clocking in at just over two hours), it's that so much of its time is misappropriated; plot threads with Tom's parents (David Paymer and Mimi Kennedy) and Violet's mother (Jacki Weaver) could be jettisoned entirely, with that time freed up to examine in greater interesting detail Tom's emotional waywardness.
Plot mechanics and style tend to get emphasized over character detail in these films.
Details on the film have slowly been trickling out over the last couple of months, and now actor Thomas Jane has spilled additional information about the plot.
Complete with jabs at social - media marketing, this is one of the film's few extended jokes likely to go over the collective heads of very young auds, but it's the kind of absurdly exaggerated everyday detail — complete with the repurposing of familiar gadgetry — on which Aardman's comic brand is built.
There is one particularly interesting segment that juxtaposes a scene in the film with a voice - over of Eugenides reading directly from his novel, which shows just how closely Coppola followed the original book in this instance, right down to the descriptive details of when lights in a house turn on and off.
Also, although the film, through flashbacks and narration does a fair job of compressing over 100 years of time into about 2 hours of film time, it would have been interesting to tell Adaline's story more in a limited - TV series in which each decade of her life experiences could have been shown in more detail.
The result is odd and not always successful, and at over two hours may be too much of a good thing, but it is full of magnificent moments and loving details, and together with Volume 1 it is the ultimate homage to the films that shaped the creative identity of Tarantino.
I've heard the book goes into far more detail, and I would be interested in reading it to see if it answers some of those questions the film glosses over.
A lot of hubbub was made leading up to the release of Peter Landesman's Concussion over accusations that the film toned down its treatment of the NFL in the depiction of this true story detailing the way that the league hid knowledge of the catastrophic brain damage their athletes suffered on the field.
Our friends over at SplashReport revealed some possible details on the film, along with a rumor that the studio wants Daniel Craig as villain Mister Sinister.
Read on for details on the film, the voice cast, and a look at over 20 images of the characters» designs.
The shorter pieces, which take on various aspects of the film, the story, production and special effects details (like the use of miniatures, which has become a rarity in the CGI age), range from under two minutes to just over twelve minutes.
The realism of the film is one of the factors that makes it so great as it uses long takes and what seems like guerrilla styled filming at times to paint a detailed picture of the hardships of simply trying to survive whether it be a child passing time by scamming money for ice cream or a young mum trying to keep a roof over her daughter's head.
The film details the battle between the two for control over their relationship.
If you've already seen the film and want to talk about various plot details without ruining it for others, head over to our Transformers: Dark of the Moon spoilers discussion.
Worst Part: The fact that the film prioritizes plot details over character — especially since the existence of «Episode IV» assures that we already know how this one ends.
What makes the film so stunning is that they don't talk about it, and that viewers understand these complex things as they unfold in subtle details over the hiking trip the pair is taking in the company of a guide in the Caucasus Mountains.
In an interview with Entertainment Weekly, Corey Stoll goes into surprising detail about the origin of his character Darren Cross, who becomes Yellowjacket over the course of the film.
Boyega and the rest of his cast members have been understandably withholding about releasing any new details from the film during interviews over the past few months, but while recently speaking with IGN about The Last Jedi, Boyega did open up a little bit about Finn's surprising «undercover» mission in the film:
If you've seen the movie and want to discuss details about the film without worrying about spoiling it for those who haven't seen it, please head over to our Civil War Spoilers Discussion - or check out our breakdown of Captain America: Civil War's Biggest Spoilers & Reveals.
Personally, I'd spend 2 hours watching the new documentary (featuring assistant director Alan Rudolph, Blakley, Tewkesbury, Carradine, Tomlin, and others) and three television interviews that Altman recorded regarding the film over thirty years (it's fascinating how his memory changes small details!).
Fantastic Fest (recap our coverage from this year)-- the nation's largest genre film festival — is pleased to announce the Fantastic Fest Tour, which will take place at all Alamo Drafthouse markets over three weekends in November (check your local listings for details).
But Berberian Sound Studio opens with a lovingly crafted credit sequence for the film, establishing an attention to detail that obtains throughout, especially in the camera's fetishistic lingering over racks of analog audio equipment.
According to HBO, the film details then unlikely friendship that evolves over one wild night in LA between struggling journalist Danny Tate (Dornan) and actor Hervé Villechaize (Dinklage), the world's most famous gun - toting dwarf, resulting in life - changing consequences for both.
Fresh off the set of the film that was funded by over 90,000 devoted fans through Kickstarter, attendees will have an opportunity to see exclusive footage, hear details about the production, and ask the cast and producers questions about this upcoming movie.
So far nobody else has been cast in the film that will be directed by Scott Derrickson (Deliver Us from Evil) and written by Jon Spaihts (Prometheus), though there have been rumblings (and potentially confused details) about Daniel Bruhl's character from Captain America: Civil War potentially crossing over into Doctor Strange.
Rumors hit over the weekend, after the Mayor of Dunkirk, France announced that a major film production was shooting in May, and now details have been confirmed.
The Hangover Part II teaser trailer debuted just over a month ago and did nothing but revisit the characters, letting the details of their appearance alone bring back the best comedy bits of the first film.
There's still over a full calendar year until Warcraft — the big screen adaption of the MMORPG World of Warcraft — hits screens, but details about the Duncan Jones - directed film were revealed Friday at BlizzCon — the convention held by Blizzard Entertainment, producers of WoW.
With The Force Awakens just over six months away from release, and the first of the new Star Wars anthology films already filming, details are starting to come to light on the next projects in the universe from Lucasfilm.
This short - and - sweet interview with Edgar Wright, whose latest fantastic film The World's End is his best work yet, features the British director imparting — over the phone — details about some of his very favorite movies and ones that...
Boasting a labyrinthine, impressionistic plot that you can either get hung up on the details of or allow wash over you in a haze of fragmentary images and evocative soundtrack details (we're more for the latter course, but both work out just fine), it's a prime example of a film that many will find frustrating in its opacity, but that brings a tenfold return on investment for those willing to let themselves be borne along by its currents.
The eye on the family's details is as superficial as the film claims the family to be — fitness classes serving sex over wellness, dad loving guns and cars, dimwitted parents against scheming youngsters.
Film grain is accurate and natural, colors are uniformly rich but not overly saturated, and the picture has been mostly cleaned of dirt, scratches, and film damage without glossing over picture detail.
A marginal improvement over Kelly Reichardt's last film, the nigh unwatchable Meek's Crossing, Night Moves follows three radicals (Jesse Eisenberg's Josh, Dakota Fanning's Dena, and Peter Sarsgaard's Harmon) as they conspire to perpetuate an act of eco-terrorism - with the film detailing the long, slow buildup to said act and its predictably disastrous aftermath.
The film is loosely based on a string of real French robberies from the early 1980s, but director Oliver Marchal doesn't bend over backwards trying to conform to some detailed procedural schematic, and the material benefits from a gritty, streamlined telling that keeps the focus first and foremost on the characters and not the ancillary mayhem that surrounds them and that they later cause.
Lincoln is not some mushy life - spanning biopic of our sixteenth president; it is instead heir to a class of film never truly reputable enough to have been actively missed; think of the forties Hollywood films Dr. Ehrlich's Magic Bullet or Edison, the Man, which sprinkle biographical detail over narratives deeply invested in tracking their famous protagonists» often obsessive quest to achieve a single goal, say, the invention of vaccinations, the creation of light bulbs, or the cessation of slavery.
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